I totally agree with you, deedee1.
Everytime when I read this kind of threads, I hope people will stop using Daisuke to prove the greatness of Patrick Chan or the fault of COP system. Please leave him in peace.
Thanks carignan. Yeah, I know...
Both are great skaters. While demonstrating what CoP rules demand and collecting huge points, they are capable to show us more than that. But it does not necessarily mean every skater should be packaged just like Patrick or Dai.
Just imagine a championship competition where there are 6 Patricks in the final group, and a Patrick who makes the least mistakes is to win. I donot want to speculate which Patrick is btter; a Patrick with 2 clean quads but a fal on 3A, or a Patrick with lovely 3A but a fluke fall on step seq. Or, there are 6 Daisukes, and a Daisuke who is the most sensual that night is to win. (I can hear an outcry from his fans who love 'Dai the cutey'

) Or, how about 3 Evgeni and 3 Evans going head-to-head again. Which one of an Evgeni or Evan is to win, I am sure this board will crash in a second or two.
One thing I value and appreciate CoP system is that it encourages skaters to improve other areas besides big tricks, and educates them to understand they can still collect decent points thru superior skating skills, spins, spirals and/or steps and enables them to stay competitive at top level without a quad.
For instance, Jeffrey Buttle at 2008 Worlds, who showed us his gorgeous skates, was the worthy Champion for me. I did not care whether he went for quads or not, and many agree with that, right? Evan Lysacek at 2009 Worlds is the same. (Evan at 2010 Vancouver is I donot know, though...) And how many of us loved Misha Ge's step sequances, who did not land even one 3A. Or how many of us enjoyed Christopher Caluza's perfect skates with no 3A/quad?
CoP also helped skaters to stay eligible longer than before. We did not see many veteran skaters to retire every four years right after Olympics anymore, did we?
Under the old system before CoP, Dai would have decided to retire upon his knee injury, because he might have been unsure whether he ever could get back his 3A or quad in time for the Olympics and would have realized he had zero chance to get a medal at Vancouver. The old system simply did not allow him to compete at the top level without quads for three years.
Patrick is the Champion at 2012 Worlds; he skated the best on the nights of the biggest event of the year. He won it fair and square. No one denies that.
But figure skating is not a sport for its fans that only a win (or not) matters, at least for me.
So, yes, I agree with you: please leave other skaters in peace.